Tag Archives: chestnuts

Prune for Dinner

2 May

Mike and I have been to Prune before, but only for (a marvelous) brunch. Prune was so marvelous, in fact, that it ranked in at number 10 of the Top 10 Noms of 2012. We vowed to come back for dinner, and nearly a year later, we finally did.

I thought they didn’t accept reservations, but as it turns out, that applies to brunch only. So we walked in around 6pm on a Saturday and they were pretty full, but the hostess said it would be about 30 minutes as long as we didn’t mind eating at the bar and she took my cell phone number. 20 minutes later, she called and to the bar we went.

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We started with Duck Liver Garbure with Toasted Chestnut. She told us it came with brussels sprout leaves and in a duck broth. It was served with a spoon.  There was no mistaking this liver for an organ. Liver, for some reason, is usually disguised. Either made into pate or in a darkened mass that is remiss of it’s organy folds. Not this one. And it tasted as organy as it looked. Though for us, that is a good thing. Though we had a very tough time not comparing it to the amazing liver we had just a few weeks ago at Local 188 in Portland, ME.

But I just loved the chestnuts in here. Chestnuts are one of my favorite foods and here they were used perfectly. They added a really nice flavor to it and paired well with the liver taste.

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For entrees we split the lamb chop and the crispy duck.

The lamb was a Grilled Lamb Blade Chop with Turkish Piyaz. I had no idea what piyaz was, but it was served with parsley and onions.  I looked up piyaz and it appears to be a bean salad… which I didn’t see. But that didn’t make it any less awesome. The lamb was super lamby without being too overpowering and the parsley and onion were a nice compliment to the lamb.

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The crispy duck was something we had seen with other diners and when it looks THIS crispy, how can you not order it?

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This was just pure, unadulterated ducky goodness. That crispy skin was very good. (There are few things in this world I like more, or crave more, than the extra crispy skin of various fowl).

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For a side, we ordered the sweet potatoes with brown butter sauce with brown sugar vinaigrette. It was served as baked sweet potato pieces (baked up perfectly so they were soft without being mushy) and they put crisped potato skins on top of a lovely mound of (not too sweet) brown butter. This was actually our favorite dish of the night.  An incredibly side… and next to such incredibly entrees, it is impressive that it was THAT impressive to us!

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By the end of the meal, I had duck and lamb on every corner of my face and hands. Because it seemed just wrong to leave a single piece of meat on these bones. I unabashedly picked each and every one up and sucked every morsel off I could get. No shame.

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For dessert, Mike went with the espresso gelato “affogato” in cold maple syrup.  A quick google search tells me that “affogato” translates to “drowned” in Italian. And that this was.  The maple syrup was a great foil of sweetness for the rich espresso gelato.

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I chose the Breton Butter Cake which our waitress/bartender (who kept us well fed, lubricated, and entertained throughout the night) informed us was the chef’s special famous dessert. Well okay then! It is served with moscato (though I opted for the full 2 oz. pour) and is a flakey, gooey, delicious butter cake sprinkled with powdered sugar. How a butter cake can taste that good and not be the slightest bit greasy, I do not know, but it was incredibly tasty and went incredibly well with the moscato.  I can see why it’s so famous.

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There is not much more to say. This was simply an incredibly meal. I just love this restaurant.  I am sure I am slightly swayed by my love for the owner’s (Gabrielle Hamilton) book, Blood, Bones, and Butter, which is one of the best food books I’ve ever read. But Mike has never read it and he has the same fondness I do. We both left there saying that we had enjoyed our meal very, very much.  There is just an absolute love for food at Prune which comes out without flash or opulence, but is just plain delicious. Hard to beat.

Total Nom Points: 8.5 out of 10

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Chestnut Cookies

7 Feb

As much as I love chestnuts, I don’t have a lot of recipes that contain them.  So when I found myself just snacking on a jar of them, I decided I’d research some cookies and found a recipe by Smitten Kitchen.  As it turns out, she adapted the recipe originally from Epicurious who posted the basis for them as “Mexican Wedding Cakes”.  This actually very much resembled these vanilla kipferl cookies that my great-grandmother used to make, so I figured I’d give it a shot.

I also was a bit ahead since I had chestnuts already in a jar. 

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 I never have luck roasting chestnuts… the ones that aren’t rotten are usually impossible to get out of the shell.   Much easier to buy them already done (even if they are crazy expensive).

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This recipe, luckily, is made for those maddening pieces of chestnuts because the first thing you do is chop them up…

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Then stick them in a food processor to pulverize them. (You can also do this by hand and then mix everything with a hand or stand mixer)

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Into a fine nutty crumb.

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To which you then add soften butter until you have a whipped delicious mound of buttery chestnut paste in your food processor.

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Then you add some freshly grated nutmeg (or the powdered if you don’t have a fresh nut on hand)

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And some powdered sugar, vanilla extract, cinnamon, salt, and flour.

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Which forms a lovely dough.

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That you then separate in half and wrap in plastic.  You can then put it into the fridge for at least an hour (mine wound up staying there for about half a day).  Why do you have to chill them?  Because otherwise you have a melty buttery mess on your hands… literally.

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Once the dough is chilled, you can remove one  ball of dough at a time and start rolling 2 teaspoon sized balls.

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Then you pop them in the oven for 14-17 minutes.  SmittenKitchen noted that they over-bake easily, so when after the 20 minute mark mine still hadn’t even started to brown… I got nervous.  I left them in for about another 3 minutes before calling it.  I rolled them over to see that they had just barely begun to brown on the bottom.  (And they weren’t too dry, but I could see how they could get there quickly… and my oven seems to always take just a little longer than recipes call for anyway).

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You then let them cool for about 5 minutes, and then toss them in a mixture of cinnamon and powdered sugar to coat them all the way around.

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Then they cool completely on a rack (okay… and you eat a few while they are warm).

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I actually kept hoping that they would get a little better as they cooled.  They were good, but not chestnutty enough for my taste (the sugar seemed to overpower the chestnut flavor) and actually wound up reminding me of Dunkin Donuts powdered sugar munchkins (not in a good way).  I think next time I will up the chestnut ratio and lower the flour ratio.  I also may try to coat them in a mixture of powdered & white sugar with the cinnamon. 

You can check out the original recipe here.

And for anyone keeping track… yes… I am addicted to chestnuts.  I think I shall call this the Winter of Obsessive Chestnut Nomming.

Drunk ‘N Nutty Pie

2 Feb

Sometimes, inspiration comes from strange places.  After making a pork chop recipe in the slow cooker with wine, apples, and chestnuts, Mike and I realized that the toppings were SENSATIONAL and would probably make for a lovely pie.  How could you go wrong with slow cooked apples and chestnuts in wine?  And so… Drunk ‘N Nutty Pie was dreamed up.  (Name is still in the works… feel free to comment with suggestions).

First up… peeling the apples.  I just got this handy dandy new contraption (which obviously doubles as a torture device) from The Pampered Chef that peels, cores, and slices apples!  I would say it works as intended about 50% of the time…

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Delivering a perfect core.

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A (mostly) peeled and perfectly sliced apple rings.

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Which can then be cut in half to make perfectly sliced pie filling.

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Uniform thin size! How novel!

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The other 50% of the time… rough.  So I wound up slicing it (and leaving SOME peel on).

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Then the apples get thrown into the slow cooker with the wine and chestnuts.  For the pie, I added cranberries, brown and white sugars, and cinnamon.

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Put it on low for about 4 hours and v’oila! Slow cooked apples, cranberries, and chestnuts in wine.

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During the last 30 minutes of slow cooking time, I started on the crust.  First you take softened butter and cut it up into the bottom of a pie plate.  Then you pile flour, sugar, red wine vinegar, and milk on top.

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Try to combine it with a knife… give up and use your hands.

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Then push it into the bottom of the plate so it’s nice and even on the bottom and sides.  Poke it with a fork to prevent catastrophe.

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And then put them in the oven to cook until they are just barely brown and hardened.

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If you don’t have a Pie Shield, I highly recommend them.  Sure you can use tinfoil to make sure the edges of the pie don’t get too brown, but why burn yourself construction a crazy tinfoil sculture when you can lay this cheap puppy on top and keep it all evenly cooked?

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I even made some mini versions to see how individualized portions would turn out.  (You know I love my silicone cupcake cups!)

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While the pie is baking up, you can make the crumble top.  I put a bit extra lemon in mine to counteract the sweetness of the crust.

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Once all the pieces are ready, you scoop out the delicious slow cooked chunks and put them into the pie. (HINT:  Save the wine left over and it is DELICIOUS as hot mulled wine)

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Pack the filling up to the brim.

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Take a moment to revel in how delicious it looks.

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Try not to shove your face into the whole plate and eat it up.

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Ok… maybe you can steal one chestnut from the top of the mini pie.  I won’t tell.
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Then start the crumbling.

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Until only a little bit of fruity goodness is peaking through.

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Sometimes I add even less… as I can now see through my alternate pie compared to the one above.

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And don’t forget about the minis.

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Sometimes you can even cover the entire thing in crumbs.  No judgments here!  But you will have to bake it until the crumbs start to turn golden on top.

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And then slice it up and try not to eat the whole thing while your guests look on in jealousy.

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Okay fine… eat the whole mini pie.

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It’s just so damn cute and delicious afterall!

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This was a HUGE crowd pleaser.  Really unique flavors and the sweet, buttery crust combined so well with the tart wine and cranberries and the slight sour in the crumble.  I think I will make this again and again and again and again and again…